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Issues in Treatment
There is no single best treatment package
for all children with ASD. One point that most professionals agree
on is that early intervention is important; another is that most
individuals with ASD respond well to highly structured, specialized
programs.
Before you make decisions on your child's
treatment, you will want to gather information about the various
options available. Learn as much as you can, look at all the options,
and make your decision on your child's treatment based on your child's
needs. You may want to visit public schools in your area to see
the type of program they offer to special needs children.
Guidelines used by the Autism Society
of America include the following questions parents can ask about
potential treatments:
- Will the treatment result in harm to my child?
- How will failure of the treatment affect my child and family?
- Has the treatment been validated scientifically?
- Are there assessment procedures specified?
- How will the treatment be integrated into my child's current
program? Do not become so infatuated with a given treatment that
functional curriculum, vocational life, and social skills are
ignored.
The National Institute of Mental Health
suggests a list of questions parents can ask when planning for their
child:
- How successful has the program been for other children?
- How
many children have gone on to placement in a regular school and
how have they performed?
- Do staff members have training and
experience in working with children and adolescents with autism?
- How are activities planned and organized?
- Are there predictable
daily schedules and routines?
- How much individual attention
will my child receive?
- How is progress measured? Will my child's
behavior be closely observed and recorded?
- Will my child be
given tasks and rewards that are personally motivating?
- Is the
environment designed to minimize distractions?
- Will the program
prepare me to continue the therapy at home?
- What is the cost,
time commitment, and location of the program?
Among the many methods
available for treatment and education of people with autism, applied
behavior analysis (ABA) has become widely accepted as an effective
treatment. Mental Health: A Report of the Surgeon General states,
"Thirty years of research demonstrated the efficacy of applied
behavioral methods in reducing inappropriate behavior and in increasing
communication, learning, and appropriate social behavior." The
basic research done by Ivar Lovaas and his colleagues at the University
of California, Los Angeles, calling for an intensive, one-on-one
child-teacher interaction for 40 hours a week, laid a foundation
for other educators and researchers in the search for further
effective early interventions to help those with ASD attain their
potential. The goal of behavioral management is to reinforce desirable
behaviors and reduce undesirable ones.
An effective treatment
program will build on the child's interests, offer a predictable
schedule, teach tasks as a series of simple steps, actively engage
the child's attention in highly structured activities, and provide
regular reinforcement of behavior. Parental involvement has emerged
as a major factor in treatment success. Parents work with teachers
and therapists to identify the behaviors to be changed and the
skills to be taught. Recognizing that parents are the child's
earliest teachers, more programs are beginning to train parents
to continue the therapy at home.
As soon as a child's disability
has been identified, instruction should begin. Effective programs
will teach early communication and social interaction skills.
In children younger than 3 years, appropriate interventions usually
take place in the home or a child care center. These interventions
target specific deficits in learning, language, imitation, attention,
motivation, compliance, and initiative of interaction. Included
are behavioral methods, communication, occupational and physical
therapy along with social play interventions. Often the day will
begin with a physical activity to help develop coordination and
body awareness; children string beads, piece puzzles together,
paint, and participate in other motor skills activities. At snack
time the teacher encourages social interaction and models how
to use language to ask for more juice. The children learn by doing.
Working with the children are students, behavioral therapists,
and parents who have received extensive training. In teaching
the children, positive reinforcement is used.
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